Voters say no to legalized marijuana in California
California's move to legalize marijuana was rejected Tuesday
CIty Council to Choose New Member Monday
The mix of applicants for the vacant Gilroy City Council seat reflects a merging of old and new Gilroy. Nine candidates for the 10-month appointment include several familiar longtime politicians and a few new residents who are Silicon Valley executives with experience at Google, eBay and Sun Microsystems.There are also two former council members, three current or former planning commissioners and former chairpersons of the Housing Advisory Committee and the Historical Heritage Committee seeking the seat vacated by Perry Woodward when he became mayor Jan. 4. Most of the applicants said they would consider running for the seat after the 10 months are up.The candidates, profiled briefly below, will be interviewed by the current council on Jan. 25 in an open session, and the new council member will be appointed right afterward. The application deadline was Jan. 15.Robert Dillon has lived in the city for 31 years, served on the council from 2001-2005 and 2007-2012. He was also a library commissioner and served on the editorial board of the Dispatch.In his application, he described high-speed rail as a “continual thorn in the city’s side,” and said his priorities are hiring a new city administrator, carefully crafting the general plan, which outlines the city’s future, and continuing the “downtown renaissance.”He said he was probably not interested in serving past the 10-month term, but added, “I wouldn’t say never.“I believe I have demonstrated my abilities in past council matters to parse and apply common sense to difficult decisions.”Toby Echelberry, who has been a business manager for companies including Anritsu, Toshiba and Green Mountain Coffee Roasters, said his main concern is economic development in the city.“In order to grow a true balanced community, we need more than hundreds or thousands of new homes,” he said, adding that “there needs to be more of a push to bring more employment of not only retail, but all commercial.”He said the city needs to sell businesses on growing here rather than having people commute to work hours away. A father of three, one in high school, one in middle school and one in elementary school, his application focuses on reducing Gilroy’s homeless population, preventing domestic violence and improving schools by eliminating gangs, bullying and drugs.“Gilroy is not only where I reside, a city I shop in, but it is my home and my future,” he wrote. He would run for the council seat after this term, he said.Joan Lewis was a planning commissioner for eight years and is a South Santa Clara County Fire District commissioner and vice president of the Gilroy Historical Society.“I feel the biggest issue facing GIlroy at this time is jobs. We need to bring good paying jobs to our residents so they don’t have to commute out of Gilroy.”She’s also concerned about poor roads and growth. “We should continue to promote infill projects and use master plans and strategic plans for larger projects,” she wrote. “Lastly, we should educate and encourage our residents to shop locally to keep our tax dollars here in town.”She said she could only commit to serving this term.Daniel J. Harney, who works at eBay, moved to Gilroy from Morgan Hill in 2011 to raise three kids in a place that focuses on “families, safe neighborhoods and good schools.“In many ways I represent the past, present and future in Gilroy,” he said in his application, adding that he supports maintaining a “cherished small town community” and knows that it will grow significantly.He favors bringing businesses to the unused industrial park in town and adding hotels and tourist venues to the downtown area.“I think it is also important to state that I do not have any other political aspiration such as county or state politics,” he wrote. His wife is a nurse at Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital in Palo Alto.Daniene Marciano, who retired as director of community-based educational options for the Santa Clara Unified School District, has been a Gilroyan for 11 years and is the niece of former Santa Clara councilwoman Aldyth Parle.“I want to make a difference in planning the future of GIlroy,” she said in her application. She has managed a $5 million school district budget, worked as a liaison between the district and the Santa Clara City Council and been a consultant at Sun Microsystems.Her husband has owned the Checkered Flag Classic Car dealership downtown for 10 years.Current planning commissioner and former city councilman Paul Kloecker voted against the proposed 721-acre development north of Gilroy because he said it was too much and too soon. A Gilroy fixture, Kloecker was on the City Council for 12 years, on ABAG also for 12 and served on the library board, the Caltrain to Gilroy Planning Task Force, the building code appeals committee and the Parks and Recreation Commission, to name a few.“I am therefore ready to rather immediately be a contributing council member needing little or no ‘learning curve.’”Tom Fischer, a retired plumber who has lived in Gilroy for 40 years, is a member of the Planning Commission and has served as its chair and vice chair.“The key issues facing the city today are: growth and revitalizing the downtown,” he wrote. “How fast we grow, where we grow and how orderly that growth occurs will help determine how successful the downtown becomes.”He was on the commission when it voted unanimously to reject the planned 721-acre development north of town. Downtown, he said, is his top priority.Harvard Law School graduate James Fay is CFO for View, Inc., a Milpitas firm that makes glass that can be adjusted over the Internet, to make windows more environmentally efficient. He’s lived in Gilroy for a decade and said his business background will help him manage executive issues.His priorities include attracting businesses and jobs; improving the downtown; enhancing infrastructure and balancing the small community heritage with modernization and development.“My professional background, critical thinking, problem solving and track record of execution illustrate that I can be a very valuable contributor to the council and city,” he wrote.Insurance auditor Thomas Baer said his extensive fiscal background can help Gilroy resolve some of its major problems. A resident of Gilroy for two years, he’s worked for the California Casualty Management Company in San Mateo since 1981 most recently as Director of Internal Audit. He’s done cost-benefit analyses, monitored corporate staffing and been in charge of privacy.His major issues include growth, downtown, water use, jobs and city pensions.“I believe I should be appointed because I have the time, I do not have an agenda and I hope my financial background, ability to bring people together, ability to sell my ideas and project management skills will complement the many skill sets already on the council.”
Measure E mailer omits key facts
Gilroy voters received a note last week from its schools chief, a four-page plug for Measure E, the $170 million bond question on the June 7 ballot to fix and build schools—and pay employee salaries, it turns out.
Council will talk keeping SV pool open – again
After months of debate between City Council and the Gilroy Unified School District, Council plans to explore the possibility of taking ownership of the swimming pool at South Valley Middle School during their regular meeting on Monday.
Council Can’t Decide on Where the Tracks Should Go
After 90 minutes of contentious debate, Gilroy City Council postponed a decision on where to locate the incoming high-speed rail line.
Exit Interview: Mayor Don Gage Says Farewell With Few Regrets
GILROY—After 34 years in various local political offices, plain speaking Mayor Don Gage, 70, announced his retirement this week, at the start of Monday’s city council meeting. The one-time farmer, IBM program manager and elected representative said he wanted to spend time with his family, including three daughters and six grandchildren. He served through boom and bust times, watched the city and the freeway grow, and leaves as Gilroy pursues its biggest and most controversial housing project.
Give some serious thought to running for a local office
“It’s really important who’s mayor and who’s on the city council, county commissioners, sheriffs, district attorney, and of course the school board.”~ Musician and politician Jello BiafraHave you ever heard about a city council or school board decision and wondered, “What were they thinking?!”Why not try to find out for yourself? Run for office. Opportunities to serve in an elected office abound right here in South County, and the time to throw your hat into the ring is right now.In Morgan Hill, the Morgan Hill Unified School District board has seven seats; the seats currently held by Peter Mandel, Kathy Sullivan, and Bob Benevento will be on the Nov. 6, 2012 ballot. The Morgan Hill City Council has five seats; the council seats currently held by Larry Carr and Marilyn Librers will be on the November ballot. The mayor’s seat, currently held by Steve Tate, will also be on the ballot (the mayor serves two-year terms in Morgan Hill).In Gilroy, the Gilroy Unified School District board has seven seats; the seats currently held by Rhoda Bress, Mark Good, Patricia Mitgaard, and Fred Tovar will be on the November ballot. The Gilroy City Council has seven seats; the council seats currently held by Cat Tucker, Perry Woodward, and Bob Dillon will be on the November ballot. The mayor’s seat, currently held by Al Pinheiro, will also be on the ballot.The nomination period – the time frame during which you can pull, complete, and return papers to file to run for office – for the November elections opened yesterday. You have until Aug. 10 to return those papers. That’s extended to Aug. 15 if the incumbent for an office does not pull and return papers during the original nomination period.In order to run, you must be at least 18 years old, a citizen of California and the United States, a registered voter, and a resident of the district for which you’re seeking office.Why should you consider running for a school board or city council seat?As former US Interior Secretary Franklin Knight Lane said, “A public office is not a job, it is an opportunity to do something for the public.”Serving on your local school board or city council is a chance to improve and give back to your community. Moreover, if you’re thinking of a career in politics, service on local boards or councils is a great training ground for the art of compromise, for the intricacies of the legislative process, and a way to understand the needs of your community before you attempt to represent your neighbors in county, state, or federal elective office.But those benefits assume that you win your race. I believe that you do your community an important service just by running for local elective office, whether you win or lose. That’s because when candidates run for office unopposed, they don’t have to debate issues, spend time with voters to learn what concerns them, be responsive to the local media, or make much of an effort at all to earn the privilege of representing their fellow community members.But as soon as there’s more than one candidate running for an office, all of that changes. When a race is contested, suddenly candidates have to meet as many voters as possible, engage in public debates, answer reporters’ questions, work hard to understand what voters want in order to earn their trust and votes.So, if you have the time, energy, interest, and skills to serve as a school board trustee, city council member, or mayor, please give serious consideration to pulling, completing, and filing nomination papers. Detailed information about running for elected office in Santa Clara County is available on the registrar’s web site at http://www.sccgov.org/sites/rov/Pages/Registrar-of-Voters.aspx. Click the Candidate & Measure Information link on the left, then choose November 6, 2012 Candidate & Measure Information from the menu.Win or lose, you’ll help your community by ensuring that every race is competitive and that no candidate has a cakewalk to public office.“Competition at the polls makes politicians more responsive to the citizens.”~ Scott BradshawLisa Pampuch is a technical editor. She lives in Morgan Hill with her husband and two children. Reach her at [email protected].
Mayor seeks backing for litigation of district map
An 11th-hour decision by the Santa Clara Valley Water District




















